Datebook: An anniversary show, works by a key Bay Area artist, paintings that touch on ideas of home

After more than 200 exhibitions, a Culver City gallery marks an important anniversary. Plus: paintings by Jay DeFeo, a collaboration between Enoc Perez and Dzine, and Wolfgang Tillman’s latest pictures. Here are a dozen events and exhibitions to check out in the coming week:

“25th Anniversary Show,” at Kopeikin Gallery. Over the last 25 years, the Culver City gallery has staged more than 200 exhibitions of photography featuring work by masters such as Helen Levitt and Sally Mann. This exhibition gathers images by those important figures — as well as many contemporary ones. Opens Saturday and runs through Dec. 23. A talk about photography will be held Nov. 19 at 2 p.m. This will be followed by a special anniversary party, beginning at 5 p.m. 2766 S. La Cienega Blvd., Culver City, kopeikingallery.com.

Jay DeFeo, “Paintings on Paper, 1986-1987,” at Marc Selwyn Fine Art. Over a four-decade career, the Bay Area-based artist became known for a diverse range of stark abstract works that included paintings, collages and monumental wall sculpture. This show at Selwyn gathers drawings from her “Samurai” series, paintings on heavy paper that were influenced by the artist’s 1985 trip to Japan, as well as an exhibition of Japanese helmets that inspired many of her abstracted forms. Opens Saturday and runs through Jan. 7. 9953 S. Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills, marcselwynfineart.com.

Wolfgang Tillmans, at Regen Projects. The German photographer, renowned for a varied photography practice that spans still life, people and forces of nature, is having his seventh exhibition at Regen with a gathering of new and old works. This includes images from his “Freischwimmer/Greifbar” series, abstract pieces that are the result of light exposed onto color photographic paper. Opens Saturday at 6 p.m. and runs through Dec. 23. 6750 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, regenprojects.com.

“Carlos Rolón/Dzine and Enoc Perez,” at Chimento Contemporary. Rolón, better known as Dzine, and Perez have teamed up for a show that explores immigration, aspiration and identity (partly inspired by the artists’ shared roots in Puerto Rico). Perez has created a series of small oil paintings that depict ideas of home; Rolón has created the frames — out of reclaimed wood and other bits of ephemera that confer notions of American-ness. Opens Saturday at 5 p.m. and runs through Dec. 10. 622 S. Anderson St., Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, chimentocontemporary.net.

“The Origin of Species,” at Noysky Projects. Also touching on the theme of immigration is a group show at this relatively new gallery space in Hollywood. The exhibition presents the work of 10 immigrant artists dealing with issues related to identity, acceptance and discrimination. Opens Friday at 6 p.m. and runs through Dec. 3. 6727 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, noyskyprojects.com.

Derek Jarman’s “Blue” at the Getty Center. In conjunction with the exhibitions “The Art of Alchemy” and “Alchemy of Color,” the museum is hosting a screening of the English film director’s experimental film “Blue,” which features a single static shot of the color blue with narration from actors Tilda Swinton and Nigel Terry and an ambient soundtrack by Simon Fisher Turner, with contributions from Brian Eno, Erik Satie and Momus. The film will be screened outdoors. Friday at 7 p.m. on the Garden Terrace. 1200 Getty Center Dr., Brentwood, Los Angeles, getty.edu.

"Battery No. 1," 2016, by Lena Daly, at Various Small Fires (Lena Daly / Various Small Fires)

Lena Daly, “Night Bell,” at Various Small Fires. It is the debut solo show for the Los Angeles artist, who makes installations that involve sculpture and video — all with the phosphorescent cast of a nightclub bathroom. Opens Saturday at 6 p.m. and runs through Dec. 23. 812 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood, vsf.la.

“In Real Life: 100 Days of Film and Performance,” at the Hammer Museum. This 4 1/2-month program is bringing a series of screenings, performances, film and video to the museum during a remodel. This includes upcoming shows by the Venice-based dance troupe Lightning Shadow, performing a piece inspired by William Faulkner and screenings of the works of Oneohtrix Point Never. Through Jan. 25. Check the schedule for events and times. 10899 Wilshire Blvd., Westwood, hammer.ucla.edu.

Henry Taylor, at Blum & Poe. The artist’s latest solo exhibition features a series of new paintings and sculptures displayed in three unique environments that tackle ideas of class — including a dirt lot and a grassy lawn. As part of the exhibition, he will also be screening a film by friend and collaborator Kahlil Joseph, who last year hypnotized with his installation “Double Conscience” at the Museum of Contemporary Art in downtown Los Angeles. The gallery will also be having a concurrent show of the early sign paintings of Mark Grotjahn. Through Saturday. 2727 S. La Cienega Blvd., Culver City, blumandpoe.com.

Marnie Weber, “Chapel of the Moon,” at Gavlak Gallery. The Los Angeles artist has transformed the gallery into a pagan chapel closely connected with her first feature film, “The Day of Forevermore,” which tells the coming of age tale of a young woman amid a coven of witches. Through Saturday. There will be a special closing-night soundscape performance by Weber and Daniel Hawkins beginning at 5 p.m. 1034 N. Highland Ave., Hollywood, gavlakgallery.com.

Wu Tsang, “The Luscious Land of God Is Sinking,” at 356 Mission. The L.A.-based filmmaker and performer is screening her recent film, “Duilian,” about a Chinese feminist revolutionary who was executed for attempting to foment revolution in the early 20th century. She is also showing new sculptures, photographs and a limestone plaque that will be embedded in the sidewalk out front. Through Sunday. 356 S. Mission Road, Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, 356mission.com.

Artists Suzanne Lacy (left) and Andrea Bowers in the windows of the Main Museum in downtown L.A. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

“Performance Lessons: Suzanne Lacy Teaches Andrea Bowers Performance Art,” at the Main Museum. For 10 days, the two prominent Los Angeles artists are occupying the unfinished galleries of the soon-to-debut museum so that Lacy, renowned for actions touching on issues of race, class and violence, will teach Bowers, whose politically-minded work is inspired by drawing, the basics of performance. On the calendar: Talks related to feminism, performance and, for election night, a political party. Through Tuesday. Check the schedule for events and times. 114 W. Fourth St., downtown Los Angeles, themainmuseum.org.

ONGOING EXHIBITIONS

Karon Davis, “Pain Management,” at Wilding Cran Gallery. Employing plaster casts and shredded medicine bills, the artist has re-created the hospital environment that her husband, artist Noah Davis, was forced to inhabit as the result of a fatal illness. (He died last summer.) These are used to create a series of figurative sculptures that conjure notions of preservation and mummification. Through Nov. 12. 939 S. Santa Fe Ave., downtown Los Angeles, wildingcran.com.

Lewis Baltz, “Docile Bodies,” at Gallery Luisotti. In 1994, the renowned California photographer created a monumental photographic installation titled “Docile Bodies,” which combined images of surveillance with fragments of human bodies. The work has not been shown in the U.S. since 1998, when the Museum of Contemporary Art displayed it. Now, Gallery Luisotti has reassembled it and placed it on view. Through Nov. 12. Bergamot Station, 2525 Michigan Ave., Building A2, Santa Monica, galleryluisotti.com.

“He/She/They,” at Rosegallery. A group exhibition gathers works by photographers whose subjects go beyond the simple gender binary of male and female. Included is a range of imagery — produced by a diverse group of artists that includes Diane Arbus, Antonio Caballero, Yasumasa Morimura and Jo Ann Callis — depicting the fluid nature of gender, from drag queens to female impersonators to androgyny of all kinds. Through Nov. 12. Bergamot Station, 2525 Michigan Ave., G-5, Santa Monica, rosegallery.net.

“London Calling,” at the Getty Museum. Drawn primarily from the collection of the Tate in London, this exhibition brings together six of the leading British painters of the 20th century, figures who resisted trends toward abstraction to focus on the figure, revolutionizing the act of painting in the process. Through Nov. 13. 1200 Getty Center Drive, Brentwood, Los Angeles, getty.edu.

Deborah Remington, “Life Drawing: A Life in Drawing, 1950-2006,” at Parrasch Heijnen. A hard-edge abstractionist who came to prominence in the 1960s in San Francisco, Remington studied with the likes of Clyfford Still, David Park and Elmer Bischoff at the California School of Fine Arts (later the San Francisco Art Institute). Her intensive drawings feature floating, shield-like shapes — images that speak to Surrealism as much as they do to the machine age. The new show gathers more than 30 works from 56 years of practice. Through Nov. 26. 1326 S. Boyle Ave., Boyle Heights, parrasch-heijnen.com.

“Guillermo del Toro: At Home With Monsters,” at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The filmmaker’s work — which includes movies such as “Pan’s Labyrinth,” “Hellboy” and “Pacific Rim” — all play with notions of the fantastical. This exhibition looks at the director’s artistic process, including plenty of drawings and maquettes, along with the objects that inspire him (including some truly odd and macabre works from LACMA’s permanent collection). These are presented in a series of thematic rooms that explore magic, occultism, death and monsters. A totally wild ride. Through Nov. 27. 5905 Wilshire Blvd., Mid-Wilshire, Los Angeles, lacma.org.

Keizo Kitajima, “New Street History,” at Little Big Man Gallery. A new exhibition devoted to the Japanese photographer gathers 25 modern and vintage prints from the esteemed artist’s series devoted to Tokyo and New York, shot in the late ’70s and early ’80s — which included gritty shots taken in nightclubs and on the street. There are also images from later projects completed in the Soviet Union and one that focused on people and architecture. Through Nov. 27. 1427 E. Fourth St., Boyle Heights, littlebigmangallery.com.

Philipp Kremer, at Nicodim Gallery. In the loose, spare brush strokes of the German artist, you are as liable to find a mournful figure in tears as you are the exuberant limbs of a pack of humans in the middle of an orgy. This is an artist who makes a lot out of a little bit of paint. Through Dec. 3. 571 S. Anderson St., Ste. 2, Boyle Heights, nicodimgallery.com.

“China: Through the Lens of John Thomson,” at CSUN Art Galleries. In the late 19th century, photographer and travel writer John Thomson traveled through China, taking plenty of pictures along the way. These are now the subject of an exhibition that showcases his eye as an astute travel photographer. Through Dec. 10. Cal State University Northridge, 18111 Nordhoff Street, Northridge, csun.edu.

Jud Fine and Barbara McCarren, “AND/OR,” at the University Art Museum. A survey exhibition includes works old and new by the L.A.-based art-making couple. This features a number of pieces related to such topics as offshore banking and the nature of currency, and a new installation, “Continental Edge Dwellers (CED),” that explores the coast — that blurry line between land and water. It’s a good subject to marinate in at a time when California’s coast is subject to struggles over development. Through Dec. 11. Cal State Long Beach, 1250 Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach, web.csulb.edu/org/uam.

Betye Saar, “Black White,” at Roberts & Tilton. The grand dame of L.A. assemblage art (who is about to open a one-woman show at the Prada Foundation in Milan) is showing four decades’ worth of sculptures and wall pieces in the gallery’s project space — transformed to reflect both the colors and politics of black and white. Also on view will be the abstract paintings of Evan Nesbit. Through Dec. 17. 5801 Washington Blvd., Culver City, robertsandtilton.com.

“Thomas Hirschhorn: Stand-alone,” at the Mistake Room. In his first solo installation in L.A., the Swiss artist has transformed the gallery into a chaotic, immersive environment crafted from cardboard, old armchairs and sofas and stocked with a carefully chosen selection of books. The artist is known for re-conceiving the idea of monuments into often humbly crafted installations (think: duct tape) that require the participation of a viewer to complete. Through Dec. 17. 1811 E. 20th St., downtown Los Angeles, tmr.la.

Detail of a work by Rosemarie Trockel on view at Ibid Gallery. (Skarstedt, New York)

“Sleep,” “David Adamo: Untitled” and “Devin Farrand: Heft,” at Ibid Gallery. The gallery debuts its new space in Boyle Heights this weekend with several new exhibitions, including a group show that riffs on the idea of sleep, as well as a pair of solos devoted to the work of sculptor David Adamo and the abstractions of Devin Farrand. Through Oct. 29. Adamo’s exhibition and “Sleep” are on view through Dec. 17. 670 S. Anderson St., Boyle Heights, ibidgallery.com.

Paul Sietsema, at Matthew Marks Gallery. The artist’s first solo exhibition in L.A. in more than a dozen years includes new paintings and drawings, as well as two recent films. The show is partly built around the color green, featuring one work of pure abstraction and another made with euro banknotes. The film “Abstract composition,” in the meantime, animates phrases from online auction sites. Through Dec. 23. 1062 N. Orange Grove, West Hollywood, matthewmarks.com.

Maria Lassnig, “A Painting Survey, 1950-2007,” at Hauser Wirth & Schimmel. This is the first Los Angeles solo exhibition for the late Austrian artist, known for her inventively weird figurative paintings. The show traces the artist’s journey over a nearly six-decade period, from her early abstractions to the mildly distorted, even cartoonish, paintings of people and settings that are more about capturing psychological states of being than rendering exact figures. Through Dec. 31. 901 E. 3rd St., downtown Los Angeles, hauserwirthschimmel.com.

Isa Genzken, “I Love Michael Asher,” at Hauser Wirth & Schimmel. This is the German artist’s first solo exhibition in California — featuring a new body of work (teetering assemblages crafted from bits of architectural and other detritus). It also pays tribute to an artist by whom she was moved and inspired: California-born conceptualist Michael Asher, who was known for architectural interventions that reconfigured physical and social ideas of space. The gallery also has a traveling exhibition titled “Schwitters Miró Arp,” that brings together works by renowned European Dadaists Kurt Schwitters, Joan Miró and Hans Arp. Sounds pretty boss. Through Dec. 31. 901 E. Third St., downtown Los Angeles, hauserwirthschimmel.com.

“MOLAA at Twenty: 1996-2016,” at the Museum of Latin American Art. The Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach is celebrating two decades in existence with a show that draws from the museum’s permanent collection of more than 1,600 objects. These include works by renowned Modernists Joaqíun Torres-García and Wifredo Lam, Argentine conceptualist Len Ferrari as well as contemporary figures such as Alexandre Arrechea and Patssi Valdez. Through Jan. 1. 628 Alamitos Ave., Long Beach, molaa.org.

“The Art of Alchemy,” at the Getty Museum. An exhibition at the Getty examines the art of alchemy — an area of study described as “science tinged with spirituality and infused with a spritz of artistic spirit” — dating from its origins in Greco-Roman antiquity to the Industrial Age. Alchemy was also closely tied to the production of pigments and colored inks, serving an important role in the production of art. That’s the subject of the related show: “The Alchemy of Color on Medieval Manuscripts,” takes on. Through Jan. 1. Getty Center, 1200 Getty Center Drive, Brentwood, Los Angeles, getty.edu.

“The Serial Impulse at Gemini G.E.L.,” at LACMA. Over the course of five decades, the innovative Los Angeles print studio has produced historic limited edition works for renowned artists such as Richard Serra, Claes Oldenburg, Vija Celmins, David Hockney and Robert Rauschenberg. Now the museum, in conjunction with the National Gallery of Art, brings together some of the most exquisite examples of work produced at the famed West Hollywood shop, including Rauschenberg’s 1967 print, “Booster,” a 6-foot-tall print that in its day was the largest art print ever made. Do not miss Oldenburg’s pieces, which ruminate on the nature of Los Angeles. Through Jan. 2. 5905 Wilshire Blvd., Mid-Wilshire, Los Angeles, lacma.org.

“S/Election,” at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery.Because too much election is never enough, the L.A. Municipal Art Gallery has put together a broad group show that examines issues of citizenship, identity, immigration and criminal justice. The show includes work by such socially and politically minded artists such as Jennifer Moon, Charles Gaines, Olga Koumoundouros and Rubén Ortiz-Torres. Through Jan. 8. 4800 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, lamag.org.

“The Drawing Show,” at the A+D Architecture and Design Museum. A new exhibition gathers drawings by architects who use the medium as an exploratory tool in their design practices. This includes images that channel everything from geometric abstraction to the weirdly biomorphic. Architects featured include figures such as Pritzker Prize-winner Thom Mayne, as well as Kyle Miller, Anthony Morey and Bryan Cantley. Through Jan. 8. 900 E. Fourth St., downtown Los Angeles, aplusd.org.

Doug Aitken, “Electric Earth,” at the Museum of Contemporary Art. The L.A. artist’s first North American museum survey features an array of collage, photographic and video installation works from throughout his career — including the cinematic “Song 1,” from 2012, screening on a massive circular screen, and “Electric Earth,” the 1999 video installation that earned him the International Prize at the Venice Biennale. Through Jan. 15. Geffen Contemporary, 152 N. Central Ave., downtown Los Angeles, moca.org.

“Truc Anh: Vacuphilia,” at Varola. The first exhibition by the Vietnamese-French artist features paintings and installations that feature bodies and body parts inhabiting an abstracted world of black and white. Through Jan. 20. Pacific Design Center, 8687 Melrose Ave., Ste. B256, West Hollywood, helenvarola.com.

Beatriz Cortez, “Nomad World,” at the Vincent Price Art Museum.The L.A.-based artist and cultural critic has transformed the gallery space at the museum into an arcade that picks apart global capitalism. A fortune-telling booth, a pinball machine and a jukebox have been pulled apart and put back together, in ways that grapple with issues such as migration, economics and identity. Through Jan. 28. East Los Angeles College, 1301 Cesar Chavez Ave., Monterey Park, vincentpriceartmuseum.org.

“Virgin of Guadalupe: Images in Colonial Mexico,” at the Bowers Museum. This exhibition looks at the extraordinary impact of the Virgin of Guadalupe on Mexican culture, history and iconography through more than 60 artworks, including objects from the virgin’s basilica in Mexico City, as well as a sacred reliquary that contains a portion of the garment worn by Juan Diego, the indigenous peasant who first saw the virgin in an apparition. Through Jan. 29. 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana, bowers.org

Nkame: A Retrospective of Cuban Printmaker Belkis Ayón, at the Fowler Museum. The Cuban visual artist was known for powerful pieces inspired by the visual iconography of the founding myths of Abakúa, an Afro-Cuban fraternal society. Over her short life (she died at age 32 in 1999), she produced a voluminous number of prints and collages in shades of black and white that convey scenes that are both magical and enigmatic. Through Feb. 12. UCLA, 308 Charles Young Drive North, Westwood, Los Angeles, fowler.ucla.edu.

“Ease of Fiction,” at the California African American Museum. The museum has launched a new slate of shows. This includes “Ease of Fiction,” a group exhibition that features work by four African artists exploring the fine line between the invented and the real and the debut museum exhibition of Los Angeles artist Genevieve Gagnard, whose photographs question notions of blackness and whiteness. There is also a beguiling room-sized installation by Hank Willis Thomas that recasts the symbols of the Confederate flag in the colors of black nationalism — and projects them in tune with a soundtrack of spoken-word audio. Through Feb. 19. 600 State Dr., Exposition Park, Los Angeles, caamuseum.org.

Toba Khedoori, at the L.A. County Museum of Art. This is the first major museum survey of the L.A.-based artist, known for her painstaking draftsmanship and enigmatic drawings and paintings. Her works often feature architectural elements, landscape, smoke and flame in ways that play with negative space and toy with meaning. Through March 19. 5905 Wilshire Blvd., Mid-Wilshire, Los Angeles, lacma.org.

“Non Fiction” at the Underground Museum. An emotionally charged exhibition curated by the late Noah Davis, in collaboration with the Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles brings together works that explore issues of race and violence. This includes important works from MOCA’s permanent collection by artists such as Robert Gober, Kara Walker, Henry Taylor and David Hammons. Through March. 3508 W. Washington Blvd., Arlington Heights, Los Angeles, theunderground-museum.org.

Loris Gréaud, “Sculpt,” at the L.A. County Museum of Art. The entire theater has been taken over by the European artist for a film that screens to only one person at a time. The nonlinear picture follows “a man about whom we know very little, who seems to be constantly developing the concept of what experiencing beauty, thought, or obsession can be,” according the write-up. Times critic Christopher Knight describes it as “pretentious and uninvolving.” A good hate-watch, maybe? On view through a yet to be determined date. 5905 Wilshire Blvd., Mid-Wilshire, Los Angeles, lacma.org.